Author:Roald Dahl,Andrew Scott

Roald Dahl - the grand master of the short story - turns his pen to anything, twisting everyday life into powerful, and sometimes terrifying fantasies. Seven superb stories, full of Roald Dahl's usual magic, mystery and suspense: meet the boy who can talk to animals, the man who can see with his eyes closed, and find out about the treasure, buried deep underground on Thistley Green.
'The absolute master of the twist in the tale' - The Times
These bizarre and unexpected tales will appeal to older readers who like the darker side of Dahl. Teens will also enjoy Skin and The Great Automatic Grammatizator, short stories also by Roald Dahl.
'One of the most widely read and influential writers of our generation
—— The TimesAn unforgettable read, don't miss it
—— Sunday TimesAn ambitious platter of intellection and emotion. Its observations are crisp; its intimations of doom resonate; its jokes are funny. Foer's best and most caustic novel, filled with so much pain and regret that your heart sometimes struggles to hold it all. Has more teeming life in it than several hundred well-meaning and well-reviewed books of midlist fiction put together
—— New York TimesFoer writes like a dream. . . big-hearted, courageous and jaw-droppingly clever
—— Deborah MoggachA darkly hilarious mile-a-minute novel
—— GuardianFoer has stretched and expanded the possibilities of the novel without losing either intellectual integrity or emotional honesty. Here I Am is not just bold, it is brave... It will be remembered when all the dinner party novels are long forgotten
—— ScotsmanHighly enjoyable and extremely funny... Foer is an absolute master of his fictional universe
—— Times Literary SupplementEmotional depth and dramatic maturity... Unarguably Foer's most substantial and impressive work yet
—— HeraldLays bare the interior of a marriage with such intelligence and deep feeling and pitiless clarity, it's impossible to read it and not re-examine your own family.
—— TIMEA brilliantly acrobatic imagination
—— Sunday TimesProvocative . . . very, very funny. Dialogue pings, as animated and inventive as an Aaron Sorkin script.
—— Sunday TimesTerrific, truthful, extremely funny and heartbreaking.
—— New StatesmanA rich, beautifully written, ambitious and grandly moving novel, which looks both at the world at large and at the deepest concerns of individual lives.
—— Evening StandardAstonishing. So sad and so funny and so wry. The book that The Corrections ought to have been
—— Scotland on SundayBrilliant, masterly, always original
—— New York Times Book ReviewA delightful fish-out-of-water account stitched together with gentle yet wondrous prose
McCloskey is a keen, sympathetic observer; her tight, controlled prose meticulously details Alice's honest consideration of her flaws and desires. The melancholic complexity of Alice's very human struggle carries this elegant novel with no easy answers.
—— Publishers Weeklyp.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 14.0px Calibri; -webkit-text-stroke: #000000} span.s1 {font-kerning: none} Humane and lucid ... The real heartbreak in this wise, discomfiting novel turns out to be the love between mother and daughter
—— New York TimesMcCloskey interrogates the universal need of finding our place in the world in this luminous novel about longing and belonging. ... McCloskey's slim novel has an emotional heft and power that stirs you long after you've closed its pages.
—— RTE GuideMasterly
—— Irish ExaminerMcCloskey's prose is lovely and light-filled
—— Sunday ExpressTerrific, sharply observed… Segal gets the precarious mother-teenage daughter relationship spot on
—— Sue Price , SagaSegal’s is a clever, cruel, redemptive, psychologically acute novel that made this reader glad to have been at school just too early for Facebook, selfies and an “online community” baying for news of your latest boyfriend
—— Laura Freeman , StandpointThoughtful and beautifully observed
—— Fanny Blake , Woman & HomeA gripping foray into second families
—— Nina Pottell , PrimaThanks to its occasional moments of emotional veracity, The Awkward Age will be praised as a worthy successor to Segal’s debut
—— Ada Coghen , Literary ReviewFrancesca Segal is an accomplished writer. She neatly describes the clash of cultures between the academically rigorous education enjoyed by Nathan and Gwen’s freer, no-holds-barred comprehensive school. There is an engaging and colourful cast of characters… Segal vividly conveys the difficulties faced by imperfectly blended families
—— Vanessa Berridge , Daily ExpressThis is a warm, funny book dealing with a most modern matter
—— Running In HeelsA brilliant, thoroughly modern family drama from the author of The Innocents
—— Hayley Maitland , VoguePunchy… Segal tackles her subject with humour and intelligence and a wealth of memorable characters
—— Giulia Miller , Jewish QuarterlyExuberant and entertaining… The rest of the narrative then considers how the competing needs and duties of its four main characters can be met, handled and resolved. It does so with brio, insight and empathy, and with carefully modulated comic energy
—— Matthew Adams , ProspectA compelling story on the complexities that come with a very modern family that we just couldn’t put down
—— TopshopLove, loss, new beginnings and saying goodbye, it's all in here. A moving read
—— Frankie Graddon , PoolA terrific novel.
—— John Boyne , Irish Independent[Segal's] descriptions are spare and unerring; everyday family interactions are observed warmly and yet with precision
—— Alice O’Keeffe , Guardian